I actually hate the CBL debates in hunting forums. In part because I hate hunters arguing with hunters over disparity or difference in opinion of hunting practices. It only damages hunting more than the varied practices itself. It’s why I think hunters hurt hunting as much as anti-hunters. I don’t think anti-hunters bicker and back-bite over how to bitch and bemoan about hunters. But as a group, we are always so quick to bicker and back-bite each other.
I’m not saying we should turn blind eye to illegal hunting or unethical practices, but send a PM or advocate for better practices without poo-poo-ing your hunting brethren.
I then more than anything hate CBL debates as I am 100% conflicted about doing one. I’ll admit, I don’t give a slightest care if someone wants to go and shoot pen raised quail or CBL. Is it as sporting as a wild quail or lion, of course not, but I dont stand in judgment of someone who chooses to, of course not. I don’t like high fences…like not at all. But fully admit they make sense in South Africa. While I’ve never hunting a small or cross fenced property, I have hunted a South African high fenced property. Took my teen daughter hunting on several. Do I personally feel they are as sporting as unfenced…no, but that’s my personal feeling and not based on any kind of empirical data. I fully admit that some of the South African fenced properties, the game is exponentially more skittish than more wild areas I’ve hunted in Zimbabwe and Botswana. So even with my personal bias that high-fenced properties are not for me, it doesn’t make them canned hunts either, and potentially even more difficult.
So why I really hate the CBL debates is they make me feel almost dirty since I find myself considering doing one. Total COSTCO style…I don’t even care if it’s a male or lioness. I don’t want to dedicate 7-10 days to one either. I just kind of want to experience tracking lion once, with the ability to take one if the opportunity presented. I don’t like hunting from a blind or over bait if I can help it. I grew up deer hunting our own ranch from various blinds and feeders, and I was over it before starting high school. I still did it and enjoyed the time with my father, but took to bow and handgun hunting, then traditional archery, anything to make it more interesting. Mostly, it’s the boredom of just sitting there that I didn’t like, so still hunted and stalked every chance I got. I’ve done black bear bait sites and the like in Alaska and while productive and have zero issue with it as a practice, it’s not that much fun for me. Do I think baiting is as sporting as going out, glassing, spotting, and stalking in for your shot…of course not…but some species and environment simply isn’t conducive to spot and stalk or tracking. Baiting and sitting a blind make sense. The idea of tracking a CBL male or female sounds honestly intriguing if the property is big enough and they were released long enough before the hunt.
BUT….i don’t know that I feel sporting in a lion released a month or two before. So as much as I’d like to track a lion, I don’t know that I’ll ever do a CBL hunt because of that component, and not sure I’d do a wild lion hunt as I sure as hell am not paying anywhere close to what they cost and have to hunt from a blind over bait. I figure someday when my knees and/or hips go from sheep hunting, I may change my mind and take a leopard but until then, at least until CBL is no more…I’m conflicted and perched between just not being a cat guy at all or feeling a little dirty and doing an abbreviated tracked CBL…that honestly I’d probably enjoy more coming home empty handed. It is one of those situations where I’d enjoy the track and chase more than the kill.